Unique pattern of dietary adaptation in the dentition of Carnivora: its advantage and developmental origin

Author:

Asahara Masakazu1ORCID,Saito Kazuyuki2,Kishida Takushi3,Takahashi Katsu2,Bessho Kazuhisa2

Affiliation:

1. Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Inuyama, Aichi, Japan

2. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto Univerisity, Kyoto, Japan

3. Wildlife Research Center, Kyoto Univerisity, Kyoto, Japan

Abstract

Carnivora is a successful taxon in terms of dietary diversity. We investigated the dietary adaptations of carnivoran dentition and the developmental background of their dental diversity, which may have contributed to the success of the lineage. A developmental model was tested and extended to explain the unique variability and exceptional phenotypes observed in carnivoran dentition. Carnivorous mammalian orders exhibited two distinct patterns of dietary adaptation in molars and only Carnivora evolved novel variability, exhibiting a high correlation between relative molar size and the shape of the first molar. Studies of Bmp7 -hetero-deficient mice, which may exhibit lower Bmp7 expression, suggested that Bmp7 has pleiotropic effects on these two dental traits. Its effects are consistent with the pattern of dietary adaptation observed in Carnivora, but not that observed in other carnivorous mammals. A molecular evolutionary analysis revealed that Bmp7 sequence evolved by natural selection during ursid evolution, suggesting that it plays an evolutionary role in the variation of carnivoran dentition. Using mouse experiments and a molecular evolutionary analysis, we extrapolated the causal mechanism of the hitherto enigmatic ursid dentition (larger M 2 than M 1 and M 3 ). Our results demonstrate how carnivorans acquired novel dental variability that benefits their dietary divergence.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Narishige Zoological Science Award

Mishima Kaium Memorial Foundation

Kyoto University Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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